pouët.net

Pirate Bay trial

category: general [glöplog]
Yeah I have a PayPal account, too. Used it with both a Danish and a UK debit card. Dunno if there are extra features if you have a US bank account, but you can pay for stuff with any bank that gives you a Visa or Mastercard or some such.
added on the 2009-04-20 19:25:47 by doomdoom doomdoom
oh noes, please protect us from the evil pirates, online child molesters and cyber-terrorists!

Quote:
So now, thanks to the brilliant minds at TPB, Sweden has legal precedence for outlawing search engines


i'm off on my own delusional tangent here, but i think that was the whole point of this TPC exercise/propaganda stunt. which is probably why they were so cock-sure and seemed to go out of their way NOT to project an image that would gain public favour and support (no in the entire world likes arrogant, cock-sure twits)

they were just doing their jobs.
added on the 2009-04-20 19:29:33 by button button
*TPB
added on the 2009-04-20 19:30:05 by button button
TPC is the guys ranking just below TPB..
added on the 2009-04-20 19:36:00 by arcane arcane
lul
added on the 2009-04-20 19:37:24 by Muerto Muerto
Oh, and http://telekompaketet.se/ also says it's tomorrow at 20:00, so unless they haven't updated their site to reflect recent changes, I'm fairly sure I'm correct on the date and time of the vote in the European Parliament.

Act, you damn EU-members!
added on the 2009-04-20 19:43:40 by arcane arcane
Ah, right.. I partly stand corrected:

- 21 April: ITRE vote
- 5 May: Plenary vote
added on the 2009-04-20 20:41:18 by arcane arcane
Quote:
Sceners against piracy...omg, I woke up in Bizarro world.


I'm wrong... Or seems that demoscene was born BY piracy?
added on the 2009-04-20 20:50:22 by SoDa7 SoDa7
yeah but things change. The snotnose kids from back then grew up to become game and software makers, and this is their shit we're talking about.
added on the 2009-04-20 21:08:44 by NoahR NoahR
eebliss: ok, so if you know the author, it's not ok to copy, gotcha!

most companies have unlicenced software on their machines, why not start there?
added on the 2009-04-20 21:21:06 by thec thec
arcane: thanx for reminding us about the fundamental amendment 138, which has been rewritten into amendment 46 (because of its rejection by some members of the council... whereas it had been adopted by a vast majority at the european parliament).

btw http://thepiratebay.org/blog/151

and the next european elections are an opportunity to vote against our repressive and retrograde governments!

added on the 2009-04-20 21:42:42 by aftu aftu
eebliss: sorry to dissapoint, but i think you'll find game developers are among the most likely to pirate software. the company a last worked for at least, it was common to ask for the latest version of maya/max+crack to be put on a known network share.

the only time anyione has a problem with priacy is when it is directly their "shit" that's being ripped
added on the 2009-04-20 21:45:40 by button button
Now Internet will be a safer place!
yay!
added on the 2009-04-20 22:07:34 by Hatikvah Hatikvah
heh http://www.blackouteurope.eu/ 509 Bandwidth Limit Exceeded

many people do seem to care about their internets :p

added on the 2009-04-20 23:27:37 by aftu aftu
http://www.laquadrature.net/wiki/Telecoms_package_directives_1st_reading_details_by_score?showmep=CarolineJackson

now reading that list makes me sick
added on the 2009-04-21 00:43:03 by button button
la quadrature du net, excellent reading ;)
added on the 2009-04-21 01:37:05 by aftu aftu
Quote:
eebliss: ok, so if you know the author, it's not ok to copy, gotcha!

You miss the point. Considering how early hackers turned out to become security consultants, game crackers turned out to become game developers or even congressmen, I think Eeblis can be given a shred of a point here. The very same people who fire brimstone and sulphur down on whatever they cannot begin to conceive ...appear to forget they were doing the exact same shit to their own predecessors back when they felt they were changing the world.

I guarantee you that whoever is the head cheese of the "you wouldn't download a car" nazi squad cannot pass the honesty equivalent of the voight-kampf test. Everybody pirates, lies and steals to some extent. Ask the unknown person who saw it fit to steal my bike!
added on the 2009-04-21 02:01:31 by Shifter Shifter
That's alright, you can always download a new one.
added on the 2009-04-21 02:24:10 by gr9yfox gr9yfox
i am a happy user of my isp's free-music shop (see http://musik.tdc.dk - once you have paid for your bandwidth, the music is free for download)
Quote:
So now, thanks to the brilliant minds at TPB, Sweden has legal precedence for outlawing search engines

Actually, no. Since they appealed on the spot, there is no legal precedence until after the next line of proceedings (IF they are found guilty again).
added on the 2009-04-21 08:57:23 by gloom gloom
macaw: Which is one of the better ways to do it. In Norway they are considering introducing a yearly fee that you pay in addition to your ISP subscription, which will go towards compensating authors, musicians and moviemakers, which is also a good suggestion. The problem with it now is that the music industry says that this would be impossible, because there would be no way of knowing which artists should get what -- mind you, this is the same music industry that wants ISPs to shut off access to the internet for people who download illegal MP3s. How the latter is possible but the first one isn't is beyond me. :)
added on the 2009-04-21 09:00:16 by gloom gloom
gloom: I know how it all works and it does seem to be a problem, as each song has various percentages for various publishers. To them the shop like macaw mentioned is a good enough solution. Pay once and enjoy. I would say track by track purchase is worse as people might simply get the file somewhere. But paying for a service - for being able to download music - is another thing. And people would gladly pay.
gloom has finally said a bunch of wise words, i'm shocked! x_x
added on the 2009-04-21 10:02:17 by aftu aftu
gloom: the content of the ISP-supported shop is very-very mainstream - however, i bet that was also the case with music on pirate bay.
yeah, I couldn't find rare stuff on pirate bay. btw, piratebay is not closed down, so no need to use the past tense )

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